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Artist | Paul Signac (1863-1935)
Title | Port of Concarneau (1925)
oil on canvas
73.4 x 53.9 cm
Exhibitor | Artizon Museum, Tokyo
Exhibition | Selections from the Ishibashi Foundation Collection
In 1900, André Derain and Maurice de Vlaminck became friends and soon rented a studio together in the Paris suburb of Chatou, where they had both grown up. They went on extended excursions together in the surrounding countryside. The artists tried out new possibilities of coloration on the banks of the Seine. From 1901 to 1904, Derain served in the military, but he and Vlaminck remained in close contact and continued working together after Derain's return. In the winter of 1904, Matisse visited the two in Chatou and realized that they were pursuing pictorial strategies similar to his own. The following summer, on Signac's recommendation, Matisse traveled with his family to the remote Southern French fishing village of Collioure near the Spanish border. Derain joined them and worked side by side with Matisse. Here, they developed a new visual language around the depiction of Mediterranean light and the negation of shadow. Matisse and Derain developed an impasto, expressive kind of painting that reconceptualized the relationship between light and shadow as well as foreground and background. The landscape paintings created at Collioure were groundbreaking for the further development of Fauvism and led to the Salon scandal of 1905.
Paul Signac. 1863-1935. Paris. Le Golfe de Calvi. The Gulf of Calvi. 1930. Bruges Oud Sint Jan. Vieil Hôpital Saint Jean.
Paintings from the MOMA collection put through object detection with Darknet Yolo with a threshold of 0.001
Artist | Paul Signac (1863-1935 in France)
Title | Capo di Noli (1898)
oil on wood
91.5 x 73 cm
Exhibitor | Wallraf-Richartz Museum, Köln
www.kulturelles-erbe-koeln.de/documents/obj/05017327
Color Magic
On the Italian Riviera, the Gulf of Genoa, is the little town of Noli. From Saint-Tropez, Paul Signac hiked there in 1896. Inspired by the beauty and the colour magic of the landscape, he started two years later on work for this picture, re-porting: "In order to spur myself on, I use patterns of dyed silk, which are so colour-intensive, so glossy. One after the other, I implement in my picture. I (...) would like to take every corner of the canvas to the utmost extreme in terms of colour." The master achieved his goal: a radiant colourfulness conjures up a shimmering ensemble of light and air, water and matter.
WRM033
Portrait of Monsieur and Madame Manet (1860) by Édouard Manet, a deeply personal and stylistically conservative work that marked his debut at the Paris Salon.
This double portrait depicts Manet’s parents: Auguste Manet, a retired judge, and Eugénie Désirée Fournier, seated side by side in a quiet, domestic setting. Manet painted it in a sober, academic style, with dark tones and restrained brushwork—likely influenced by Spanish masters like Velázquez and Goya, whom Manet admired. The composition is formal, almost austere, with little ornamentation, reflecting both the bourgeois dignity of the sitters and the conventions of mid-19th-century portraiture.
Though it lacks the radical flair of Manet’s later works, this painting was accepted by the Salon of 1861, shown alongside The Spanish Singer, which signaled his emerging interest in modern life and painterly innovation.
The portrait remained in the family for decades, passing from Manet’s brother Eugène to Julie Manet, daughter of Berthe Morisot, before being donated to the French state in 1977. It now hangs in the Musée d'Orsay.
Paris 1863 - Paris 1935
Sailboats in the Port of Saint-Tropez
1894
Watercolour, ink, graphite on paper
Paris 1863 - Paris 1935
1894
Watercolour, ink on paper
Left:
Claude Monet
The Seine near Asniers
Oil on Canvas
Berthe Morisot
Child among Hollyhocks - 1881
Oil on Canvas
Paul Signac
The Seine near Courbevole - 1883
Oil on Canvas
Right:
Berthe Morisot
The Harbour of Nice
Oil on Canvas
Edouard Manet
Still Life with Bunch of Asparagus
Oil on Canvas
Paul Gauguin
The Seine near Pont de Grenelle
Oil on Canvas